TECHNOLOGY: An idea for a competive App store?

Monday, November 18, 2024

FROM: TLDR Information Security 2024-11-18

North Korean-Linked Hackers Were Caught Experimenting With New macOS Malware (2 minute read)

Three variants of a new macOS malware have been detected. One variant was written in Python, one in Golang, and one using Flutter, which heavily obfuscates code by default. The malware was embedded in a clone of Minesweeper. No evidence of exploitation has been found – the callback domain returns a 404. The malware appeared to target cryptocurrency developers. It had several of the hallmarks of a Lazarus group attack. 

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If someone would make an App Store that certified apps as “malware free”, then I bet they could make a lot of money.  I’d just surcharge the app’s price by a dollar or two.  Maybe even just charge a fraction of a bitcoin.

If I was younger and richer, then I’d try to exploit that niche.  Alternative App Stores to Google Play and Apple Apps Stores.  The EU and the US Gooferment are going to force Google and Apple to support alternatives.  So you have to make that alternative App Store have a significant value proposition.

IMHO

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NOTRECOMMENDED: Putting a child on an andriod phone

Monday, November 18, 2024

Tried to put him on two different android phones.

Apparently, “FAMILY LINK” doesn’t work.

I wind up with a device that constantly reboots.

“Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” — attributed to Einstein, Ben Franklin, and Rita Mae Brown

I now have two devices that just reboot over and over again.

Maybe I’ll just buy him an obsolete iPhone.

Argh!

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SURVIVAL: How to NOT survive, don’t be ‘exhausted and ill-prepared’

Monday, November 18, 2024

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/california-search-team-rescues-hikers-19894482.php

Bay Area & State
Calif. search team rescues ‘exhausted and ill-prepared’ Mount Whitney hikers
By Sam Mauhay-Moore, Trending News Reporter Nov 7, 2024

*** begin quote ***

Inyo County’s Search and Rescue team has once again taken to social media to scold a set of hikers who needed assistance after being unable to summit Mount Whitney on Saturday. 

The two hikers began their trek on Friday evening with the intent to summit the mountain on Saturday, Inyo SAR posted on Facebook. Equipped with “150lbs of newly-purchased gear plus 5 gallons of water,” the pair made it 2.7 miles before stopping to camp on the trail at about 3 a.m. “They were exhausted, and one subject had two blisters and a bad headache,” Inyo SAR wrote. They later woke up to snowfall, with their shoes full of snow. 

The “exhausted and ill-prepared” hikers then called the search and rescue team for assistance, Inyo SAR wrote. 

*** and ***

Inyo SAR listed several things that went amiss before and during the incident, the first being the hikers “attempting Mt. Whitney without prior experience, proper preparation, or essential items such as a map, weather forecast, and bear canister.” Weather forecasts for that weekend predicted up to two feet of snow in the Sierra Nevada, and the U.S. Forest Service warns that fall conditions on the Mount Whitney trail often include hazardous pockets of snow and ice that require hiking with gear like crampons and ice picks. The Forest Service also recommends hikers train extensively before attempting to summit Whitney, as the 22-mile round trip hike is notoriously gnarly and includes over 6,000 feet of elevation gain. 

*** end quote ***

Did they say 150# of newly-purchased gear plus 5 gallons of water?

For the uninitiated in “survival”, 5 gallons of water is about 40#.   Go to your local supermarket and carry FOUR 10 pound sacks of spuds just to the checkout and you’ll get a sense of what that really means.

There’s a reason that USAF survival school, as well as private one, spend a lot of time talking about “weight”.  In a survival situation, you are urged to review everything you THINK you need and pare it down to what you must absolutely have.  Then take a short hike  —  in the military that’s FIVE miles  —  in the USMC that’s 20 or 30 miles  —  then reassess what you are carrying.  That’s why Amazon hawks “extra light weight” stuff of campling.

I’m glad the hikers survived and perhaps their story will educate everyone else.

Once again, I question “Who pays?”.   Certainly, it shouldn’t be the Taxpayer.  Perhaps, at these “attractive locations”, “rescue insurance” should be sold with big sign as to what an uninsured rescue will cost.  Maybe then we will have a lot less “rescues” needed!

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